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How to apply Genetic Algorithms Successfully

How to apply Genetic Algorithms Successfully. Prabhas Chongstitvatana Chulalongkorn University 4 February 2013. What is Genetic Algorithm. Genetic Algorithms are algorithms in the class of Evolutionary Computation. What is Evolutionary Computation.

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How to apply Genetic Algorithms Successfully

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  1. How to apply Genetic Algorithms Successfully Prabhas Chongstitvatana Chulalongkorn University 4 February 2013

  2. What is Genetic Algorithm • Genetic Algorithms are algorithms in the class of Evolutionary Computation

  3. What is Evolutionary Computation EC is a probabilistic search procedure to obtain solutions starting from a set of candidate solutions, using improving operators to “evolve” solutions. Improving operators are inspired by natural evolution.

  4. Survival of the fittest. • The objective function depends on the problem. • EC is not a random search.

  5. Genetic Algorithm Pseudo Code • Initialise population P • While not terminate • evaluate P by fitness function • P’ = selection.recombination.mutation of P • P = P’ • terminating conditions: • 1 found satisfactory solutions • 2 waiting too long

  6. Simple Genetic Algorithm • Represent a solution by a binary string {0,1}* • Selection: chance to be selected is proportional to its fitness • Recombination: single point crossover • Mutation: single bit flip

  7. Recombination • Select a cut point, cut two parents, exchange parts AAAAAA 111111 • cut at bit 2 AAAAAA111111 • exchange parts AA111111AAAA

  8. Mutation • single bit flip 111111 --> 111011 • flip at bit 4

  9. Other EC • Evolution Strategy represent solutions with real numbers

  10. GA compare to other methods • “Indirect” -- setting derivatives to 0 • “Direct” -- hill climber • Enumerative – search them all random – just keep trying • Simulated annealing – single-point method • Tabu search

  11. What problem GA is good for? • Highly multimodal functions • Discrete or discontinuous functions • High-dimensionality functions, including many combinatorial ones

  12. What problem GA is good for? • Nonlinear dependencies on parameters (interactions among parameters) -- “epistasis” makes it hard for others • Often used for approximating solutions to NPcomplete combinatorial problems

  13. Building Block Hypothesis BBs are sampled, recombined, form higher fitness individual. “construct better individual from the best partial solution of past samples.” Goldberg 1989

  14. Estimation of distribution algorithms GA + Machine learning current population -> selection -> model-building -> next generation replace crossover + mutation with learning and sampling probabilistic model

  15. Conclusion • GA has been used successfully in many real world applications • GA theory is well developed • Research community continue to develop more powerful GA • EDA is a recent development

  16. References Goldberg, D., Genetic algorithms, Addison-Wesley, 1989. Whitley, D., "Genetic algorithm tutorial", www.cs.colostate.edu/~genitor/MiscPubs/tutorial.pdf Ponsawat, J. and Chongstitvatana, P., "Solving 3-dimensional bin packing by modified genetic algorithms", National Computer Science and Engineering Conference, Thailand, 2003. Chaisukkosol, C. and Chongstitvatana, P., "Automatic synthesis of robot programs for a biped static walker by evolutionary computation", 2nd Asian Symposium on Industrial Automation and Robotics, Bangkok, Thailand, 17-18 May 2001, pp.91-94. Aportewan, C. and Chongstitvatana, P., "Linkage Learning by Simultaneity Matrix", Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference, Late Breaking paper, Chicago, 12-16 July 2003. Aporntewan, C. and Chongstitvatana, P., "Building block identification by simulateneity matrix for hierarchical problems", Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference, Seattle, USA, 26-30 June 2004, Proc. part 1, pp.877-888. Yu, Tian-Li, Goldberg, D., "Dependency structure matrix analysis: offline utility of the DSM genetic algorithm", Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference, Seattle, USA, 2004. Introductory material of EDAs Goldberg, D., Design of Innovation, 2002. Pelikan et al. (2002). A survey to optimization by building and using probabilistic models. Computational optimization and applications, 21(1). Larraaga & Lozano (editors) (2001). Estimation of distribution algorithms: A new tool for evolutionary computation. Kluwer. Program code, ECGA, BOA, and BOA with decision trees/graphs http://www-illigal.ge.uiuc.edu/

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